Authors
Federico Sabbadin, Glyn R Hemsworth, Luisa Ciano, Bernard Henrissat, Paul Dupree, Theodora Tryfona, Rita DS Marques, Sean T Sweeney, Katrin Besser, Luisa Elias, Giovanna Pesante, Yi Li, Adam A Dowle, Rachel Bates, Leonardo D Gomez, Rachael Simister, Gideon J Davies, Paul H Walton, Neil C Bruce, Simon J McQueen-Mason
Publication date
2018/2/22
Journal
Nature communications
Volume
9
Issue
1
Pages
756
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Thermobia domestica belongs to an ancient group of insects and has a remarkable ability to digest crystalline cellulose without microbial assistance. By investigating the digestive proteome of Thermobia, we have identified over 20 members of an uncharacterized family of lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs). We show that this LPMO family spans across several clades of the Tree of Life, is of ancient origin, and was recruited by early arthropods with possible roles in remodeling endogenous chitin scaffolds during development and metamorphosis. Based on our in-depth characterization of Thermobia’s LPMOs, we propose that diversification of these enzymes toward cellulose digestion might have endowed ancestral insects with an effective biochemical apparatus for biomass degradation, allowing the early colonization of land during the Paleozoic Era. The vital role of LPMOs in modern agricultural pests …
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